Variance and Special Use Permits: Seeking Exceptions to Zoning Rules
Zoning laws establish baseline rules for how land can be used, but no code can anticipate every legitimate property situation. Variance and special use permits are the two primary legal mechanisms through which property owners seek administrative relief from zoning restrictions without changing the underlying zone. Understanding how these instruments differ, what standard must be met, and how local boards evaluate requests is essential for anyone navigating a non-conforming property situation, an unusual development proposal, or a land use conflict.
Definition and Scope
A variance is a formal grant of permission from a local zoning board of appeals (ZBA) or board of adjustment allowing a property owner to deviate from specific dimensional or use requirements established in the zoning ordinance. Variances do not change the zone; they create a limited, parcel-specific exception. Under the model framework articulated in the Standard State Zoning Enabling Act (SZEA), first published by the U.S. Department of Commerce in 1926, states grant municipalities authority to establish boards empowered to hear and decide variance applications.
Two distinct variance types exist and are treated differently across jurisdictions:
- Area variance (dimensional variance): Permits deviation from physical standards such as setback distances, lot coverage percentages, building height limits, or minimum lot size. An example is a request to build a garage 3 feet from a property line where the ordinance requires 5 feet.
- Use variance: Permits a land use that is otherwise prohibited in the zone — for instance, operating a small commercial bakery in a residential zone. Use variances face a higher evidentiary burden and are disallowed entirely in some states, including New York for area-only variance frameworks under Town Law § 267-b.
A special use permit (also called a conditional use permit, or CUP) operates differently. It authorizes a use that the zoning ordinance already identifies as potentially appropriate in the zone but requires individualized review before approval. The zoning code explicitly lists these uses as permissible upon conditions — churches, schools, day care centers, and drive-through restaurants in commercial zones are common examples. For background on how zoning classifications structure these distinctions, see Zoning Laws and Property Use.
How It Works
The procedural path for both instruments follows a structured administrative process governed by state enabling legislation and local ordinance. The general sequence is:
- Pre-application meeting: The applicant meets with local planning or zoning staff to confirm which relief type applies, identify submission requirements, and determine hearing schedules.
- Application submission: The applicant files a formal petition with required documentation — site plans, surveys, photographs, and a written hardship statement for variances or a use analysis for CUPs. Land surveys and a precise legal description of the property are standard requirements.
- Public notice: Most jurisdictions require published notice in a local newspaper and mailed notice to adjacent property owners within a defined radius, commonly 200 feet, at least 10 days before the hearing.
- Public hearing: The ZBA or planning commission holds an open hearing. The applicant presents; neighboring owners and the public may testify for or against.
- Board deliberation and decision: The board applies the applicable legal standard and issues a written decision with findings.
- Conditions attachment: Approved special use permits routinely carry conditions — hours of operation, screening requirements, traffic mitigation — that become binding on the property.
- Appeal: Denied applicants may appeal to a local court, typically within 30 days of the written decision, under the state administrative procedure law.
The American Planning Association (APA) publishes guidance on best practices for conducting variance and CUP hearings, emphasizing written findings tied explicitly to each element of the applicable legal standard.
Common Scenarios
Property situations that most frequently generate variance or special use permit applications include:
- Nonconforming lot development: A lot platted before current zoning was adopted may be too small to meet modern setback requirements on all sides, necessitating an area variance before a building permit issues.
- Historic structures: A pre-existing structure that encroaches on a setback line may require a variance before an addition can be approved under deed restrictions and covenants or updated code.
- Accessory dwelling units (ADUs): Height or lot coverage limits often trigger area variance requests when adding a detached ADU.
- Religious institutions: Under the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc, municipalities face federal constraints on denying or conditioning land use approvals for religious assemblies, making special use permit denials for churches legally sensitive.
- Telecommunications facilities: Federal Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7), limits local authority to deny wireless facility permits based solely on radio frequency emissions or community opposition, intersecting with special use permit processes.
- Short-term rentals and home-based businesses: Residential zones increasingly require conditional use permits for these activities, with conditions addressing parking, signage, and guest limits.
For properties with overlapping complications — such as easements in real estate or recorded encumbrances on property — the variance process must be resolved before those instruments can be fully renegotiated.
Decision Boundaries
The legal standard a board must apply separates variances from special use permits sharply.
For a variance, the classic test — derived from state enabling statutes modeled on the SZEA and interpreted through decades of case law — requires the applicant to demonstrate:
- Unique hardship: The restriction causes practical difficulty or unnecessary hardship attributable to characteristics of the specific parcel, not personal financial hardship or self-created conditions.
- Not self-created: The hardship cannot be the result of the owner's own actions.
- No substantial detriment: The relief will not cause substantial detriment to adjacent properties or the neighborhood character.
- Not contrary to intent: Granting the variance must not undermine the general purpose of the zoning ordinance.
Many states distinguish "practical difficulty" (area variance) from "unnecessary hardship" (use variance), with the latter requiring a showing that the property cannot yield a reasonable return under any permitted use — a considerably heavier burden.
For a special use permit, the standard is different in kind: the use is presumptively compatible with the zone, and the board's role is to determine whether the specific application, at the specific location, can be approved with or without conditions that protect surrounding uses. Boards evaluate traffic, noise, hours, site design, and compatibility with the real estate disclosure requirements framework applicable to future sales of the property.
The critical contrast: a variance applicant must prove hardship to overcome a presumption against deviation; a special use permit applicant needs only demonstrate the use meets the ordinance's conditioning criteria, with the burden considerably lower.
Boards lacking written standards for CUP conditions risk legal challenge on vagueness grounds. The National Association of City and County Attorneys (NACCA) and the APA both recommend that ordinances enumerate specific and objective criteria for each conditional use category to reduce arbitrary decision-making.
References
- Standard State Zoning Enabling Act (SZEA) — American Planning Association reprint
- American Planning Association (APA) — Zoning Practice and Planning Advisory Service
- Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA), 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc — Department of Justice
- Telecommunications Act of 1996, 47 U.S.C. § 332(c)(7) — FCC
- New York Town Law § 267-b — New York State Legislature
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development — Zoning and Land Use